KUALA LUMPUR: Many of the Rohingya migrants who died in the Wang Kelian tragedy could have been saved if police had taken immediate action upon discovering the death camps in early January 2015.

European Rohingya Council ambassador to Malaysia Tengku Emma Zuriana was responding to the New Straits Times’ exposé on the possibility that information on the discovery of the more than 150 graves in the hills of Wang Kelian may have been withheld by certain quarters working in cahoots with human trafficking syndicates.

The police had said during a press conference to announce the discovery of human trafficking camps in Wang Kelian on May 25 that they believed the sites were only vacated three weeks before.

“If action had been taken earlier, we may have been able to save more lives... but because of the delay, we only have graves.”

She said the government should step up efforts to prevent such tragedies from happening and costing more innocent lives.

“We know that the Bangladeshi government has arrested a number of human traffickers who send their ‘goods’ to Malaysia, so it shows that this activity is still happening.

“These victims were supposed to be sent to Malaysia, but the Bangladeshi authorities intercepted them.”

She said it was crucial for the authorities to find every single perpetrator in the Wang Kelian tragedy and prosecute them to the fullest extent of the law as a deterrent to others.

“I hope they will be charged. It does not matter if they are ‘sharks’, or ‘small fry’.

“For as long as they are involved, they need to be charged.

“If not, these syndicates will continue doing what they do,” she said, adding that she hoped that the authorities would take immediate action to investigate the findings of NST’s reports.